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Literary clinical practice: desire,depression and toxic masculinity in Hamlet
Authors:Scott Wilson
Institution:1. Dept. Journalism, Publishing and Media, Kingston School of Art, Kingston-upon-Thames, UKS.Wilson@Kingston.ac.uk
Abstract:ABSTRACT

This essay introduces the notion of a literary clinical practice for which it remains essential to continue to consider those texts that open up a place for a readership, or audience, or even a civilization to consider the endlessly generative failure of its literature to write mental health. Concerned with mental illness that is an effect of language on the subject, the body, and of the enigma of the truth as cause, psychoanalysis is the crucial interlocutor for any literary clinical concern with the maladies of literature and society. In order to re-assess the utility of Shakespeare’s Hamlet to contemporary problems such as depression – perhaps the dominant symptom of our time – this essay attempts a reconsideration of Jacques Lacan’s famous seminar on Hamlet from the perspective of the contemporary clinic of the Lacanian orientation in psychoanalysis led by Jacques-Alain Miller.
Keywords:Shakespeare  Hamlet  depression  toxic masculinity  literary clinical practice  psychoanalysis
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